Roberta E. “Bobbi” Crawford

Homicide

Roberta “Bobbi” Crawford was a fireball. She worked as the registrar at Ellsworth Community College and raised her son as a single mom. She also loved racquetball, skydiving, and being a grandmother. To her son, Lee, she was more than a mother — she was a friend.

Franklin County in Iowa

Hampton in Franklin County

All that disappeared in an instant when, sometime between late Tuesday night, November 16, 1999, and early Wednesday morning, November 17, Bobbi Crawford was murdered inside her tiny home in Hampton, Iowa. An autopsy concluded the 53-year-old — who lived alone — died of blunt force trauma to the head.

Police found Crawford’s body Wednesday after co-workers at the Iowa Falls college reported her missing.

Someone had cut what they thought were the phone lines and then broke in, killing her in her bedroom. Burglary didn’t seem to be the motive. Nor had Crawford been sexually assaulted.

Courtesy photo WHO-TV

Bobbi Crawford’s only son, Lee, spoke with Channel 13’s Aaron Brilbeck about losing not just his mom, but his friend.

‘Not Knowing’

Lee Crawford, who lives in Sigourney with his wife, Jolie, and the couple’s two sons, told Channel 13’s Aaron Brilbeck he remembers getting the news, and then having to make the three-hour drive to his mother’s home.

“Not knowing,” Lee Crawford said in an interview WHO-TV aired January 27, 2011. “Basically the whole way. Not knowing what’s going on at home. What’s happened. Hoping someone’s been caught.”

Lee described the trip as the “three hour drive from hell.”

He spent the next few days in a fog, not knowing what had happened or why someone would want to do such a horrible thing to his mom. None of it made any sense.

“It’s like that missing jigsaw puzzle of…you know…the big question is why. And who? And you don’t know,” he said.

Growing up, it had been just the two of them.

Courtesy photo WHO-TV

Bobbi Crawford, 53, was slain inside her small Hampton home on November 17, 1999.

“It was me and her together. All my trials and tribulations and all my emotions kind of went through her,” he told Brilbeck. “So the way I react to things kinda comes from her. I kind of wear my heart on my sleeve and that’s kind of where she was. Everything was my heart on my sleeve.”

Even after Lee grew up, got married and started his own family, the two remained close. After all, she’d been his sounding board while growing up and all through junior high school.

“If I was having problems she was the first one I’d talk to. It’s just one of those things you don’t have now,” Lee said.

Reward Offered

Two years after her murder, authorities offered a $19,500 reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction. The reward included $14,500 in local funds and $5,000 from The Carole Sund/Carrington Memorial Reward Foundation, an organization established in memory of Sund, who was found murdered in Yosemite National Park. The foundation has provided reward money in 100 murder cases in 27 states.

Courtesy photo WHO-TV

Hampton Police Chief Ray Beltran keeps a picture of Bobbi Crawford on his office wall. Beltran was the first officer to arrive at the crime scene.

In a Globe Gazette article dated Nov. 14, 2004, Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI) Special Agent Bill Basler said he could not comment on specifics but said the case was still being investigated.

Hampton Police Chief Ray Beltran told Channel 13 he keeps a picture of Bobbi Crawford on his office wall — right above a filing cabinet dedicated to her case. The case haunts him, he says, and he takes it very personally.

“I was the first officer to arrive on the scene, and the contact that we’ve been having over the years with the family — with her son Lee — I just can’t imagine not having closure,” Beltran said in the 2011 interview with WHO-TV’s Brilbeck.

Over the past eleven years, the Hampton police and state investigators have tracked hundreds of leads — some across state lines — but still can’t make sense of such a senseless crime.

“It kind of confuses you,” said Hampton Police Captain Jim Hilton. “You work on it. You try your best to go forward and get some resolve. And it is frustrating.”

Courtesy photo WHO-TV

Bobbi Crawford embraced being a new grandmother. Family video footage (see below) shows her dancing around the room with her new grandson.

Lee Crawford said he credited his wife, Jolie, with helping him through the first years after his mother’s death and remained hopeful the crime would be solved.

“There’s probably not a day that goes by I don’t think about it,” Crawford, who teaches reading and writing to students with learning disabilities at Sigourney Junior-Senior High School, told the Waterloo/Cedar Falls Courier in an earlier interview. “I have two sons, and it’s a bitter reminder this time of year when they don’t have a grandma. They’ve missed out on her and what she could have brought to them, spoiling them.”

Crawford said he’s had to use other things to replace that. In addition to his teaching, he’s also coached football, basketball and baseball. His mother, he said, used to “truck him around” to Little League baseball games, Boy Scout meetings and other events.

Courtesy photo WHO-TV

“You work on it. You try your best to go forward and get some resolve. And it is frustrating,” Hampton Police Captain Jim Hilton told Channel 13 in a recent interview.

In June 2005, a private investigator from South Dakota said he believed Bobbi Crawford was killed by a serial killer — the same one he believes killed Mason City television reporter Jodi Huisentruit. The detective said the suspect was a Newton native who then moved to Arizona, where he and another member of the Aryan Nation allegedly beat a man to death.

Despite the leads, no one has ever been charged in Bobbi Crawford’s homicide.

Both the family and police say there will be no rest for them until the killer is caught — and they get some answers.

It’s hard for Lee and Jolie to watch their sons grow up knowing they’ve been robbed of a grandmother to spoil them.

Courtesy photo Dick Johnson/The Globe Gazette

Fran Foland of Geneva and her mother, Kay Whitesell of Hampton, pause at the grave of their sister and daughter, Bobbi Crawford, in Hampton Cemetery.

Yes Ray Beltron was the first officer on the scene and he contaminated the crime scene to the point there was nothing much of any use. Hampton is a small town where everyone knows everyone elses business. Ask anyone who lives there ‘ Who murdered Bobbi Crawford’ and the answer will be the same. They should’ve taken a closer look at the Ex-chief of police!

I know nothing of any Hampton officers. However I will say, it’s pretty much the same personality profile. Serial killer/ cop. It’s a matter of choices that’s makes the difference. But in general the traits are the same.

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